The fact that people are investing in pre-revenue or no revenue stocks in quantum computing is concerning.
  If you have  few thousand in gambling number cool. Otherwise stay away and investing in GOOGL, MSFT, IBM or even AMZN that have annouced  quantum iniitiative. They have the money to survive till it becomes viable.
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      tum Leap Into Cryptography BTQ Technologies (NASDAQ: BTQ) has quickly become one of the market’s hottest new entrants following its Nasdaq debut in late September 2025, transitioning from OTC markets under the ticker BTQQF. The company focuses on post-quantum cryptography, developing security solutions that protect blockchain and digital infrastructure against future quantum decryption threats.
  Shares have surged 281% year-to-date and 122% this month alone, driven by heavy retail speculation and growing interest in “quantum-proof” cybersecurity. Recently,  BTQ made headlines after demonstrating “Bitcoin Quantum,” a post-quantum fork of Bitcoin  using NIST-standardized ML-DSA signatures, completing a full transaction cycle and preparing for a Q4 testnet launch.
  However, despite the hype, BTQ remains largely pre-revenue. For Q2, the company reported sales of approximately $47,000, down from about $65,000 a year ago.  Net loss came in at roughly $1.4 million, compared to $1.2 million in the same period last year. While the company’s technological ambition is undeniable, its speculative valuation and lack of meaningful revenue make it a high-volatility play perhaps better suited for traders rather than long-term investors…at least for now.
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   See how the Weekend Income play works here  Churchill Capital X and Infleqtion: A SPAC Bet on Quantum's Future Churchill Capital Corp X (NASDAQ: CCCX) has emerged as one of the more credible gateways into quantum computing following its  announced merger with Infleqtion, a pioneer in neutral-atom quantum systems. While CCCX itself is a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC), serving as a vehicle to take Infleqtion public, the deal, valued at $1.8 billion and expected to close in early 2026, would result in the merged company trading under a new ticker symbol, INFQ, on the Nasdaq.
  Once completed, the business fundamentals and financial performance will reflect those of Infleqtion, not CCCX. This means that investors are effectively betting on Infleqtion’s long-term quantum opportunity rather than CCCX as a standalone entity.
  Infleqtion already stands out in the quantum computing landscape. The company generated nearly $29 million in trailing 12-month revenue, growing at an impressive 80% CAGR. Its sales include quantum computers and advanced sensors to clients such as NASA, the U.K. government, and  NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA). This tangible revenue base gives the future INFQ a level of credibility rarely seen in such an early-stage, speculative sector.
  Notably, Citron Research recently called Infleqtion “far superior to Rigetti,” assigning a fair value estimate of $55 per share, while CCCX currently trades near $21. If the merger proceeds as planned, the new INFQ could represent one of the most balanced risk-reward profiles in the quantum arena.
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